
Monday, 12th May 2008 - 15:59CET
47 migrants die off Tunisia coast
Forty-seven illegal migrants died of starvation and cold after the engine of rickety boat transporting them from Libya to Italy broke down, a Tunisian newspaper reported today.
Sixteeen other migrants, who survived the tragedy, dumped the 47 bodies on the Mediterranean sea in a bid to prevent the boat from sinking, the weekly Assabah el Ousboue said, quoting security officials who had been briefed by survivors.
The wind pushed the damaged boat towards Tunisia's shore where coastguard rescued the 16 would-be migrants, it added.
The migrants left the coastal Libyan city of Zawara last week.
Three corpses, believed to be those of the dead migrants,
washed up near the coast village of Bekalta, some 250 km (150
miles) southeast of Tunis, the newspaper said. Three bodies were also recovered off Malta last week although it is not known if they came from the same boat.
Last year at least 471 were reported dead or missing after hazardous journeys, according to the United Nations and migrant defence groups.




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Comments
Mass immigration whether it is legal or illegal to Europe and the West is not a solution to their problem nor is the imposition of Multiculturalism on us.
I am not sure if this article still appears at timesofmalta.com. However I have a copy that I can forward to any body interested.
I fully agree and thank Mr. Steve Calascione for his valuable comment.
Libya has the same problem Europe does! Porous land borders and thousands of square miles of desert to police!
They don't want illegals anymore than we do! I have seen some sights in the desert none of you want to, believe me, but it's not possible to stop the flood without some kind of joint effort by WHOEVER to stop it.....
There are criminals waiting to transport these people all over the world in many countries, do not blame the Libyan authorities! Criminals are Criminals....Money is Money that's the root cause.
In reality nobody wants any more illegal migrants both in Europe and Libya
The problem is the UN. They should be responsible that every country can help its people.
The following excerpt from a randomly selected article titled "Food Security and the African situation" (reproduced below) should hopefully, shed some light on the real causes of African migration towards the prosperous European mainland:
"According to estimates by the UN Food and Agricultural Organization (FAO), almost 200 million Africans were undernourished at the dawn of the millennium, compared to 133 million 20 years earlier [...]. There are regional differences, with sub-Saharan Africa hardest hit. Here, about 33 % of the population is undernourished, compared to about 6 % in North Africa and 15 % in Asia, according to the FAO. And more than 60 % of the undernourished in sub-Saharan Africa are in Eastern Africa".
You might also like to refer to the recent Times of Malta blog discussion (by Fr. Joe Borg) on the subject of food price hikes in developing countries.
Please avoid jumping to conclusions before conducting research, it only encourages extremists:
BusinessWeek's stark warnings in 2005 leave us in doubt as to how the problem should be tackled. This article was penned before the recent and alarming rise in staple food prices.
"The World Food Summit set targets for the reduction of hunger, which have largely been missed, particularly in Africa. Also, the Millennium Development Goal on hunger and poverty is likely to fail in Africa. A projected aggregate demand growth for food of 2.8 % per year up to 2015 is likely to exceed projected production growth of 2.6 % per year over the same period, implying that major food imports are needed in the absence of significant productivity growth. The combination of low agricultural productivity and an adverse environment have made Africa the prime recipient of food aid. At the same time, Africa is forced to divert scarce resources to importing food".
Regards,
SMC
Source:
Food Security and the African situation
http://www.africangreenrevolution.com/en/african_agriculture/security/index.html
Africa's 200 Million Empty Plates
http://www.businessweek.com/bwdaily/dnflash/aug2005/nf20050816_1137_db016.htm